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Charles Wilkins Short and John Torrey Correspondence, 1834-1859

Charles Wilkins Short and John Torrey Correspondence, 1834-1859
Author: Charles Wilkins Short
Publisher: Legare Street Press
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2021-09-10
Genre:
ISBN: 9781015095229

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Charles Wilkins Short and John Torrey Correspondence

Charles Wilkins Short and John Torrey Correspondence
Author: Charles Wilkins Short
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1834
Genre: Botanical specimens
ISBN:

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Correspondence from Charles Wilkins Short to John Torrey, dated 1834-1859. Short's earlier letters are focused sharply on botany, sending lists of species and new and opinions of colleagues. The latter are usually complimentary, with one exception: "Is not Rafineque a madman! and have you honestly any confidence in him?" By the early 1850s Short is feeling his age-- "As to my poor self I feel that the gowing infirmities of age are rendering me every year more and more unable to do even what little I once did towards the humble labours of a collector of plants"-- and unable to go into the field, he turns his attention to supporting the work of others. His letters from the early 1850s are largely concerned with the support of the unfortunate German pharmacist-botanist Carl Bogenhard, and the ill-fated Carolina "expedition" of J.H. Lundgren. Even as he is clearing up the mess from the Lundgren affair, in the same letter Short asks, "Do you know of any laudable enterprize [sic], now on foot for the advancement of our favourite Science, in which I can lend a helping hand?" In his last letter, dated October 31,1859, Short looks back with some regret on his botanical career. "...I fear that my 'labours of love' in these matters have been of but little service or benefit to the Science, and have only been a source of private and personal gratification to myself," he muses. "But what more could have been expected from one, who in his earliest and best days was doomed to the drudgery of a laborious medical practice; and in his later and declining years is surrounded and encompassed by the cares and anxieties of a large family? I have six children and have lost four-- have had twenty-two grand children, five of whom are dead! Is it any wonder that I have done so little in the world of Science or Letters? Little or much, however, I beg you to be assured, my dear sir, that I shall ever entertain a most lively sense of the 'aid and comfort' which you have at all times rendered me, and that I am very cordially and gratefully yours..." Obsolete and unresolved plant names mentioned include Andromeda axillaris, Bellis integrifolia, Cardamine uniflora, Kuhnia, Planera, and Vesicaria.


Isaac F. Holton and John Torrey Correspondence

Isaac F. Holton and John Torrey Correspondence
Author: Isaac Farwell Holton
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1840
Genre: Botanical specimens
ISBN:

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Correspondence from Isaac F. Holton to John Torrey, dated 1840-1870. In his early letters, the young preacher Holton writes from his first teaching post in Illinois, where he complains of a lack of mental stimulation ("I see absolutely nothing of a scientific nature except at Dr. Mead's ... The last prairie flower is dead & I have not till now seen a Botanical work this year"), not to mention his own books and clothes, held up for months in shipping. Throughout the 1840s Holton leads an almost itinerant existence, cobbling together a meagre living from preaching and lecturing on scientific subjects; he reflects often on his uncertain future ("Am I to circulate in an eddy all my life? I hope not.") and asks Torrey for advice. By the latter half of the decade he has moved to New York and found work teaching in girls' and boys' schools and later, at the New York College of Pharmacy. After some years in New York and Princeton, New Jersey, Holton finds his way to New England, and finally again to Illinois, and a late marriage. Surprisingly little mention is made of his journey to South America and the book which came out of that trip, "New Granada: twenty months in the Andes" (1857). The collection also includes letters from Holton to Asa Gray, Samuel Barnum Mead, Charles Wilkins Short, Oliver Rivington Willis, Peter Vincent Le Roy, and Seth Hastings Grant. Obsolete plant names mentioned include Annona triloba, Canchalagua, and Nelumbium. The final letter makes use of the phrase "metric florin" and includes an unidentified annotated newspaper clipping pertaining to systems of currency.


Bartonia

Bartonia
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 324
Release: 1985
Genre: Botany
ISBN:

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Thomas Say Correspondence to Charles Wilkins Short

Thomas Say Correspondence to Charles Wilkins Short
Author: Thomas Say
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1831
Genre: Helicina
ISBN:

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Correspondence from American entomologist and conchologist Thomas Say (1787-1834) to botanist and physician Charles Wilkins Short (1794-1863), written while Say was residing in the New Harmony Settlement in Indiana, requesting works by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque (1783-1840), particularly pertaining to Unio (freshwater mussels), which Say wished to quote from in his ongoing work, American Conchology. He also provides descriptions of possibly new species of Unio he named, interruptus, glebulus, nexus, declivis, and lapillus. In addition, the letter describes Helicina occulta, a species of snail, and Lumbricus terrestris, or North American earthworm.